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  • Writer's pictureM.H. Barton

Character Study - Tony Stark (MCU)

Tony Stark. The original hero of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Genius, billionaire, playboy, philanthropist. The Invincible Iron Man. Arguably the Earth’s greatest hero and protector. There is no denying Tony Stark’s importance in the MCU, as well as in storytelling in general. He is the very definition of a deep, complicated, and flawed protagonist, capable of capturing the hearts and imaginations of audiences around the world. But what makes him so interesting and compelling? What nuts and bolts make him tick? That’s what we’re going to talk about in this character study.


Tony Stark was born to Howard and Maria Stark. He always described his childhood as difficult, to say the least. Howard Stark, billionaire industrialist and co-founder of S.H.I.E.L.D., was far from an ideal father by his own admission. Continuing a cycle of stern, abusive fathers, he was often harsh with the young Tony and never openly expressed love or affection toward his son. With his father often sending him away to boarding school, Tony would always have more fond memories of his mother. While not much is known about Maria Stark in MCU continuity, she had to have been a patient and intelligent woman to tame the serial womanizer in Howard Stark. Despite his strained relationship with his father, Tony cared very deeply for his mother his whole life. Sadly, both Howard and Maria died while Tony was in college, leaving him to face his adult life alone.


With Tony’s upbringing and natural intelligence, it was only a matter of time before he took the technology industry by storm. After graduating from MIT, he joined his late father’s company, Stark Industries, and quickly began to prove himself as a visionary. Together with Obadiah Stane, Howard’s old business partner, they brought Stark Industries into the post 9-11 era with gusto. Through it all, Tony considered himself an ironmonger with a code of honor, designing his weapons to protect American soldiers and their allies. He thought he had everything figured out and taken control of his life. That, of course, was when life threw him a massive curveball.


Becoming Iron Man


The 2008 attack on Tony Stark’s convoy changed his life in so many ways. Upon being captured by the Ten Rings terrorist group, Tony was forced to build a weapon for them alongside Ho Yinsen, another captured scientist. Tony soon formed a bond with Yinsen, not only due to the older man saving his life but also from Yinsen’s words of inspiration. Seeing Stark Industries weapons in the hands of terrorists by way of the black market lit a tiny flame in Tony’s heart, but it was Yinsen sacrificing himself to save Tony that pushed him to change how he lived all facets of his life. This is the easiest and simplest way to view Tony Stark’s initial transformation into a hero, but the truth goes far deeper.


Ho Yinsen’s sacrifice turned out to be the catalyst for enflaming another of Tony’s personality traits: his obsessive perfectionism and need for control. This was almost always due to his feelings of guilt for his past sins – Tony was well aware of how flawed he was and suffered great insecurities as a result. These traits would go on to define the rest of Tony’s life in so many different ways. Even from the very moment he set foot back on American soil, he stated publicly that the weapons industry had become comfortable with zero accountability, pushing him to exercise control over the rogue parts of the industry he could influence. The result was the birth of Iron Man, a superhero in an advanced suit of armor capable of flight and armed with the most advanced weaponry Stark Industries had ever produced. At the heart of it all was Tony Stark’s magnum opus: the arc reactor. A more advanced version of the electromagnet he had built as a captive, the arc reactor was an exceptionally powerful source of self-sustaining energy, allowing the Iron Man suit to function for extended periods.


Through his early adventures combating Obadiah Stane, Justin Hammer, and Ivan Vanko, Tony’s need for control only grew. In each case, he saw the increasing dangers of his weapons and inventions falling into the wrong hands. Yet Tony remained so untrusting or, perhaps, so egotistical that he seemed to define any hands other than his own as the wrong hands. He wouldn’t even trust his best friend, James Rhodes, with the Iron Man armor until faced with the threat of Vanko duplicating Tony’s inventions. This distrust leads us directly to Nick Fury.


The Avengers Initiative


Tony Stark and Nick Fury are polar opposites in many respects, but one specific part of their personalities align perfectly – they are both futurists. They’re constantly trying to anticipate and prepare for everything, especially those things others might say can’t happen. Fury, given his past experiences with Carol Danvers, knew the day might come when humanity would face an insurmountable threat. Thus, he created the Avengers Initiative, an idea to bring together a team of remarkable people to face such unique threats on behalf of humanity. On the day Tony Stark revealed to the world that he was Iron Man, Fury had his first potential candidate.


Things did not go well in the early days for Tony and Fury. Tony’s lack of trust in anyone but himself, combined with his erratic and impulsive nature, leads Fury to disqualify him from the Avengers Initiative except in a consulting capacity. At that point in his life, Tony was not in any way a team player. Though Fury suspected the massive potential of Tony Stark, he feared him to be more of a liability than an asset. Tony eventually did stabilize himself to some extent after neutralizing the threat of Ivan Vanko, but Fury still opted for a wait-and-see approach. A couple of short years later, however, this cautious mindset would be thrown out the window.


With the reemergence of Loki and his theft of the Tesseract, the Avengers Initiative was no longer a mere thought experiment. As Nick Fury assembled the candidates for his team, Tony’s shortcomings in team settings moved to the forefront. While he had relatively polite and positive interactions with fellow scientist Bruce Banner, Tony treated Nick Fury, Natasha Romanoff, and Thor Odinson with distrust from the outset. And, of course, that barely scratches the surface of the instant clash seen between Tony and Steve Rogers. Soon, Agent Phil Coulson was dead, and Thor and Banner MIA. In the aftermath, the Avengers seemed broken, shut down before they even got started.


Yet despite their differences, Phil Coulson’s death served to galvanize Tony and Steve, motivating them to mount a defense against Loki’s incoming army. As they arrived in New York with Natasha Romanoff and Clint Barton, they began to repel the invasion. At first, nothing worked, and even the arrival of Thor wasn’t enough to change things. It’s only when Bruce Banner arrived that the Hulk was able to stem the initial assault and bring the six Avengers together as a team for the first time. It was at that moment of their first team-up that Tony experienced a moment of personal growth with one simple statement.


“Call it, Cap.”


With those three words, Tony finally acknowledges his own failings and shortcomings, recognizing that Steve Rogers is the leader the Avengers need. Steve is a soldier with a tactical mindset, which is exactly what helps turn the tide. Finally working together as a team, the Avengers coordinate their efforts and stymie Loki’s early invasion efforts. But even this isn’t enough to prevent Nick Fury’s superiors from ordering a nuclear strike on Manhattan. Knowing he’s the only one capable of intercepting the missile, Tony never once hesitates. He takes control of the missile’s flight path and, proving to Steve that he does have the ability to make the sacrifice play, directs the nuke into the wormhole and towards the mothership for Loki’s army. Though Steve Rogers became the leader of the Avengers in this battle, Tony earned the title of Earth’s Best Defender.


PTSD


The years immediately following the Battle of New York were tumultuous for Tony Stark. Suffering from insomnia and nightmares, he spends his time in his lab, tinkering with dozens of new Iron Man variations and distancing himself from his girlfriend, Pepper Potts. Even in saving the planet from an alien invasion, Tony’s compulsive desire to control the situation plagues him. He knows how bad it could have been, that they won the day largely on nerve and good fortune. The Aldrich Killian incident only exacerbated this stress, though Tony managed to even himself out to some degree after ending the threat of the Extremis virus. After undergoing surgery to remove the shrapnel from his chest, Tony goes into semi-retirement, resolving to only bring out the Iron Man armor again in the event of extreme scenarios.


Such a scenario arrived three years after the Battle of New York. With the revelation that HYDRA had infiltrated S.H.I.E.L.D., Steve Rogers assembled the Avengers once more to assault the HYDRA base holding Loki’s scepter. Though they were successful in retrieving the scepter, Tony’s mind was unknowingly attacked by Wanda Maximoff. She saw his fears about future invasions and used her abilities to heighten those fears, leading Tony to make the first truly drastic mistake of his superhero career.


Using the semi-sentience within Loki’s scepter, Tony enlists Banner’s assistance in creating Ultron, an A.I. program capable of inhabiting mechanical bodies. Tony envisions Ultron as the bouncer to protect Earth from all future cosmic threats, but he severely underestimates the lengths Ultron will go to fulfill his prime directive of saving the world. Though Tony later redeems himself by using his established Jarvis program with the Mind Stone to create the heroic Vision, his creation of Ultron resulted in a massive breach of trust with the rest of the Avengers. In particular, the divisions between Tony and Steve deepen, as Steve voices his disgust at Tony’s attempts to win all future wars before they start. In the end, Ultron is destroyed, but only after the total destruction of Sokovia. Tony goes back into retirement while helping to fund the reorganized Avengers.


Civil War


Despite the success of the Avengers against Ultron, Tony’s psyche continued in a downward spiral. He already felt intense guilt for his role in creating Ultron, and when an Avengers operation in Lagos went awry and resulted in civilian deaths, global tensions boiled over. With public support for the Avengers divided, the United Nations demanded further oversight. Tony, in his guilt, then became the one thing he had never been before – fully compliant with a governmental entity. Instead of first approaching the Avengers to discuss a possible response, he hastily agreed to give the United Nations what they wanted. Tony then went to the Avengers and informed them they would either submit to the UN’s Sokovia Accords or be permanently retired.


Needless to say, Tony’s actions did not go over well with the Avengers. While some felt the Sokovia Accords would likely happen no matter what and agreed to them to maintain some semblance of control, others saw Tony as once again going behind their backs to undermine the team. Steve Rogers had long-held philosophical differences with Tony Stark, and he viewed this latest revelation as an attempt to handcuff the Avengers, hampering their ability to respond to enhanced threats too dangerous for normal authorities. In but a few short years in the modern-day, Steve had developed a massive distrust in politicians and now made his choice to refuse to submit.


Tony’s actions regarding the Sokovia Accords and Steve’s reply highlight a fantastic dichotomy between the two characters. Where Tony began his journey as a man who refused to submit to any authority except himself, he now advocated for UN control over the Avengers. Conversely, where Steve began as a loyal soldier who followed orders, he now saw corruption everywhere, not in the governmental systems themselves, but in the people in charge of them. Here, at the midpoint of the Infinity Arc, the two principal characters have completely swapped philosophical places in a jarring fashion, making a full-scale conflict inevitable.


Throughout the Avengers Civil War, many compromises were made, but nobody made more compromises than Tony himself. As previously stated, Tony considers himself a futurist, always trying to anticipate that which nobody else can. He saw the Accords as unavoidable and believed that the only way to keep one hand on the wheel was to agree to them up front. This initial compromise leads to several others, such as quarantining Wanda Maximoff at the Avengers compound, attempting to pressure Steve to sign the accords with promises of amendments, and interfering with Secretary Ross’ systems while talking with Sam Wilson about Steve’s whereabouts. Tony tries to do the best he can, but one cannot deny that he is all over the place at this point.


After finally tracking Steve Rogers and Bucky Barns to Siberia, Tony agrees to help in their mission to kill the Winter Soldier program, having learned that Bucky had been framed for the events that started the Civil War. Unfortunately, this alliance is short-lived, as Tony soon learns from archive footage that a brainwashed Bucky was the one who had murdered Howard and Maria Stark years ago. Worse, Steve had learned about this two years before and kept the information from Tony. With all trust between them destroyed, Tony tries and fails to kill Steve and Bucky. The result is Steve and his supporters going on the run as outlaws and Tony taking leadership of a ramshackle team, both remnants of what the Avengers once were.


Starting Over


With the Avengers in shambles, Tony needed a new sense of purpose. Thus, he took on a protégé in the young Peter Parker. He saw much of himself in Peter, a poor kid from Queens with genius-level intelligence. Determined not to become the harsh adult Howard Stark had been, Tony began his relationship with Peter as the cool adult, outfitting him with a technologically advanced Spider-Man suit. Still, Tony couldn’t hide his protective instincts and constantly advised Peter to keep a low profile in his duties as a Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man.


It is in Tony’s mentorship of Peter that we see one of Tony’s most positive attributes – his ability to adapt and learn from past experiences. We’ve gotten glimpses of this in the past, but it’s now on full display with Peter’s Spider Suit. There are two features of the suit of particular note: the built-in heater and the automatic parachute. During the Extremis incident, Tony found himself stranded in the snowy mountains of Tennessee, endangering his survival. And, of course, he’s been in danger of falling to his death twice, in his first flight of the Mark II armor and coming out of the wormhole during the Battle of New York. Additionally, James Rhodes was paralyzed after he fell out of the sky during the Civil War. Learning from these experiences, Tony worked to ensure the young Peter wouldn’t fall victim to similar situations.


There was one thing, however, that Tony could not anticipate: the determination of Peter Parker to be more than just a street-level hero. If Tony had any measure of experience with teenagers, he would’ve known that they don’t simply take “no” for an answer. Alas, he continued to unintentionally belittle Peter while the young hero reported an increase of advanced weaponry finding its way into the hands of street criminals. Peter, for his part, didn’t help matters when he blew the cover of a group of FBI agents attempting to apprehend the weapons dealers Peter had reported, allowing the villains to escape. Angry at Peter’s disobedience, Tony reacts exactly as his own father would have and takes Peter’s Spider Suit away from him. Thankfully, Peter responds well to this punishment, taking it upon himself to prevent a massive shipment of Stark technology from falling into the hands of the black-market arms dealers. This helps repair the relationship between them and Tony begins to consider Peter as a future Avenger.


The Infinity War


Tony’s efforts to reinvent himself after the Civil War are remarkable. He successfully mentored Peter Parker into an amazing young hero and repaired his relationship with Pepper Potts, eventually asking her to marry him. Despite the Avengers being split apart, life was finally becoming worth living for Tony. Sadly, this peaceful time would soon be interrupted by the sudden reemergence of Bruce Banner, who had been MIA since the end of the Ultron incident. Bruce returned to Earth with a simple warning: Thanos is coming.


When Thanos’ minions, the Black Order, launched an attack on New York, Tony was forced to team up with Peter Parker and master sorcerer Doctor Strange to repel the attack. In this battle, we once again see Tony’s incredible knack for evolving his tactics, as his armor has been upgraded with nanotechnology, heightening both his offensive and defensive capabilities to new levels. Even with all the superhuman individuals around him, Tony’s pure technological genius once again proves to be the best asset Earth has against cosmic threats. Unfortunately, Strange and the Time Stone are captured during the fight, forcing Tony to board the Black Order’s spaceship to rescue him. Worse, Peter has stowed away to try and help, putting the young hero in more danger than Tony ever wanted him to be in. Tony was now on a collision course with the Mad Titan, Thanos, and everything he cared about was at risk.


Tony’s attempts to prepare for the coming conflict were anything but smooth. First, he had to contend with Doctor Strange, whose ego was on par with Tony’s. Once they felt they had a plan, they had to adjust once more with the sudden arrival of the Guardians of the Galaxy. Though more people might seem an advantage against Thanos, Tony lacked much faith in the capabilities of these new arrivals given their shoot-from-the-hip attitude. The irony in his frustrations is that Steve Rogers once felt the same way about Tony in their first adventure together.


It is in the Battle of Titan that we truly see Tony Stark at his finest. In Tony’s last major loss, Steve Rogers had bested Tony’s advanced technology thanks to his superior skills in hand-to-hand combat. Tony has taken this ass-kicking to heart and deploys a staggering number of new weapons in this fight, including a shield, sword, and hammer designed to help him in hand-to-hand scenarios. In this way, a mere human is able to keep up with Thanos throughout the fight – only Thanos’ four Infinity Stones put him out of Tony’s league. But in the end, Thanos overpowers Tony and stands ready to kill him. That is when Doctor Strange does the one thing Tony never expected and surrenders the Time Stone to save Tony’s life. With his mission accomplished, Thanos vanishes into a portal. Mere minutes later, Thanos gains the final Infinity Stone and wills half of all life out of existence. Tony is hit by this worse than most, as he is forced to watch Peter Parker, one of the only people he truly cared for, turn to dust in his arms. Tony’s greatest failure is complete.


Aftermath


The time immediately following Tony’s battle with Thanos is not depicted on screen, but we can surmise it was a whirlwind of emotions. As the only other survivor of the Snap on Titan was Nebula, it can be assumed that she and Tony started working together to find a way back to civilization of any kind. While Nebula worked to treat Tony’s wounds and the pair of them tried to repair Star Lord’s ship, Tony certainly had much to think about and come to grips with.


It is curious that Tony is so angry with the late Doctor Strange for his actions in the Battle of Titan. After all, Strange had previously stated he wouldn’t hesitate to let Tony or anyone else die to keep the Time Stone safe. That, however, was before Strange’s preparations for Thanos’ arrival. Using the full power of the Time Stone, he viewed over 14 million possible outcomes of the conflict with Thanos and informed Tony that they only win in a single instance. This revelation frames every one of Doctor Strange’s actions going forward. Everything he does is in an effort to bring about that one scenario.


If Tony had his normal mental faculties, he would have been able to understand this. He would have been able to figure out that the only reason Strange would surrender the Time Stone was if it was required for the Avengers to eventually win in the long run. But Tony is incapable of understanding these things due to his grief over losing Peter. He had always seen himself in the young man and sought to protect Peter from his own ambition, which nobody ever did for Tony in his younger days. His failure to keep Peter away from the fight against Thanos would go on to haunt him for years.


Reality soon sets in for Tony, as he and Nebula are unable to keep Star Lord’s ship flying for more than a couple of days. They are soon stranded in space with no hope of reaching any inhabited planet in time. It is this dire situation that shows us Tony hasn’t lost his humanity. He and Nebula spend their days getting to know each other, rationing their supplies, and even playing paper football. Watching Tony teach Nebula, the abused and sadistic daughter of Thanos, how to have fun for the sake of having fun is one of the sweetest moments in the entire MCU. We even see Tony offer Nebula some of his food, only for her to decline. With her cybernetic enhancements, she knows Tony needs the food more than she does. In the meantime, Tony records messages in the event his beloved Pepper ever finds them. He is soon resigned to his impending death, and only the miraculous arrival of Captain Marvel saves his life.


After Captain Marvel tows the ship back to Earth, Tony finally sets foot on his home planet once more, only to be greeted by the one man he didn’t want to see – Steve Rogers. Though Tony initially foregoes any pettiness in favor of hugging Pepper, the debrief soon brings everything to a head. Where Steve is still focused on doing everything he can to track down Thanos, Tony refuses to mask his disgust any longer. He places the blame for their combined loss squarely on Steve’s shoulders, stating he wasn’t there when Tony needed him. He further states that his fears were right all along, that the Earth needed more advanced defenses even if they had to curtail individual freedoms and liberties in the process. Soon, Tony collapses into a coma from exhaustion and his previous injuries.


After Steve’s unsuccessful attempt to recover the Infinity Stones, the Avengers must live with the consequences of their ultimate failure. For Tony, this means moving on from Iron Man permanently, marrying Pepper Potts, and having a daughter with her. Morgan Stark becomes the light of Tony’s universe over the next five years. Despite all the damage done by Thanos, Tony has found something to live for. He seems perfectly content in his quiet retirement, which makes the eventual arrival of his former teammates all the more painful.


Five years after the battle with Thanos, Steve arrives at Tony’s home with Natasha Romanoff and Scott Lang, also known as Ant-Man. When they explain their theory of using the Quantum Realm as a means of traveling into the past to recover the Infinity Stones, Tony is immediately dismissive. While it would be easy to think this attitude is due to old wounds between Tony and Steve, it soon becomes clear that Tony simply thinks they’re trying to latch onto an impossible pipe dream that will eventually kill them all. His tone does soften to a remarkable degree as Tony says that he’s genuinely happy to see his old friends, but that they need to look forward for their second chance.


Even as Tony proclaims he has found his second chance in his family and won’t roll the dice on it, he’s still plagued with guilt over losing Peter Parker. As well, Tony is a tinkerer and a gearhead at heart. He can’t resist experimenting with a new technological toy and soon tries working out the theoretical logistics of Lang’s proposed Time Heist, even as nothing but a little game. To the surprise of Tony and nobody else, he soon discovers it to be more than theoretically possible. Of course, he still wonders if going along with this is the right thing to do and considers dropping all evidence of this research at the bottom of a lake. Thankfully, Pepper retains her role as Tony’s conscience and reminds him that he’d never be able to sleep again if he did that. Thus, the plans for the Time Heist commence.


The Endgame


As Tony officially rejoins the Avengers, he knows there is still business to attend to. The final reconciliation between Tony Stark and Steve Rogers is simply beautiful. Steve has just hit a brick wall in their own efforts to control time through the Quantum Realm and while Tony could gloat over this, (okay, he does for a moment, but we’d have been disappointed if he hadn’t) he immediately explains that he’s figured it out and is willing to help. After five years, he’s realized that resentment is corrosive. For once in Tony’s life, he is completely upfront and honest about his motivations, emphasizing to Steve that his family must remain intact after the Time Heist. Steve agrees, prompting Tony to swallow his ego and return the shield of Captain America to Steve.


Of all the parts of the Time Heist, Tony and Steve each take on arguably the riskiest and most difficult parts. While Steve manages to swipe the Mind Stone, Tony and Lang flub their retrieval of the Space Stone. But while Lang frets that they’re screwed, Tony just glances at Steve and realizes how they can still accomplish the mission. All it takes is a few short words about a military base in New Jersey to convince Steve that Tony is right. Sealing their friendship for good, Steve states emphatically that he trusts Tony and the pair disappear once more into the time stream.


Just when Tony believes he’s finished reconciling with his past, this final time jump brings him face-to-face with Howard Stark in his prime. Nervous as Tony is to face his strict dad once again, he’s pleasantly surprised to find Howard a jovial and kind man, far different than how Tony remembered him. As they chat, Tony admits that he always disliked his father, but now that he’s grown, he only remembers the good times. After all, Howard, for all his mistakes, helped mold Tony into the hero he eventually became.


Each of these sentimental moments is crucially important for Tony’s final journey. If he hadn’t flubbed the original retrieval of the Space Stone, he would never have had the chance to gain closure with Howard. Without that, it’s doubtful that Tony would have had the strength and conviction to make his final gutsy play. Ah, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves.


Once the Time Heist is complete and a new Infinity Gauntlet has been crafted, Tony’s role in the following events actually diminishes somewhat. After Banner brings back the lives Thanos ended, a younger Thanos from the past erupts from the Quantum Realm with his ship and army, ready to take the Infinity Stones for himself. With most of the Avengers trapped in the rubble of the compound, the task of confronting the Mad Titan falls to the Big Three – Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor.


Surprisingly, Tony is knocked out of this fight relatively quickly, with Thor and Steve getting the bigger opportunities to take on Thanos. This can be seen as odd until one remembers that this isn’t the same Thanos Tony fought before on Titan. This Thanos is younger, hungrier, and has not discarded his armor and weapons in favor of the Infinity Stones. His fierce and brutal fighting style quickly overwhelms Iron Man’s preferred combat style of keeping his foes at arm’s length. But as he did before in the Battle of New York, Tony is graceful in taking a backseat once Steve takes up Mjölnir and assembles the entire Avengers against Thanos’ army.


As the battle rages, the sudden reappearance of Doctor Strange seems to have jogged Tony’s memory. No longer suffering from grief-fueled amnesia, he asks Strange if this is the one in 14 million chance that they win, but Strange refuses to say. It’s a brief exchange, but such a pivotal one for Tony. Instead of pressing Strange, Tony seems to accept that this is one thing he can’t actively control and reenters the fight. This is a remarkable move, showing that Tony can grow beyond his obsessive need for control and understanding. With this last show of growth, all the pieces are in place.


In the end, even the combined efforts of the Avengers aren’t enough to stop Thanos from getting his hands on the Infinity Gauntlet. But just as he’s about to end the entire universe and remake it in his image, Tony goes for broke. His seemingly futile effort to grab Thanos’ hand was actually a clever ploy, using his nanotech to move the Infinity Stones from the gauntlet and into the Iron Man armor. The consummate futurist with a contingency plan for everything has just deployed one last contingency to top Thanos. With the power of creation itself flowing through him and knowing full well the likely consequences, Tony smiles at his greatest adversary and delivers one final quip for the ages.


“And I… am… Iron Man.”


Conclusion


Steve Rogers once referred to Tony Stark as Earth’s Best Defender. Why was that? What made this man so vital to the safety of Earth and its people? He didn’t have enhanced strength or senses like Captain America or Black Panther. He wasn’t a god-like warrior the likes of Thor or Hulk. Hell, Tony didn’t even have a lifetime of combat training like Black Widow or Hawkeye. He was just a man with unlimited financial resources, untold creativity, and one of the most brilliant minds on the planet. In the end, that was exactly what Earth needed in its darkest hour.


Tony Stark’s final sacrifice was the sum of his experiences and traits – his guilt, his need for control, his lack of trust in anyone but himself, his overwhelming ego, and his ability to adapt himself and his tactics endlessly no matter the strength of his opponent. Even his awful mistakes, such as Ultron and the Sokovia Accords, put him exactly where he needed to be to save the universe when it mattered. Everything he did and experienced on his Hero’s Journey made this final moment possible. Tony was, to be sure, a deeply flawed individual. Those flaws were what made such a difficult journey necessary. He didn’t begin as a hero, even after building the Iron Man suit, but Tony Stark grew into the role of a hero so well that, in the end, nobody else could even be considered Earth’s Best Defender.


I hope you enjoyed this deep dive into the character of Tony Stark. Robert Downey Junior’s portrayal of the character is nothing short of transcendent, and it was so fun to revisit all the key moments that made his work so worthwhile for all of us as fans and as storytellers. I don’t know if any of my heroic characters could ever rise to the level of the MCU’s Tony Stark, but it’s certainly something I aspire to as an author.


If you did enjoy this blog entry, please let me know in the comments. Feel free to mention if you have any ideas or requests for future entries. I’ve got an active running list of ideas, but I’m always open to more. I’d appreciate it if you’d leave a like and share this post on social media. And to stay up to date on future blog posts, you can sign up for my monthly newsletter on my website. Until the next story!

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